“Keiko Lane’s Blood Loss travels back through the heart of AIDS Activism with fierce love and a dazzling, devotional desire to bring the story back to life. What I found in these pages was history, memory, hope, fight, and a heart beating, not beaten. This book is a brilliant love letter to those we lost and a message for all of us who remember. We must keep telling the stories for those who carry on next.” - Lidia Yuknavitch, author of (The Chronology of Water) “Keiko Lane is a powerful writer, and Blood Loss is especially notable for its perspective of a young Asian American queer woman AIDS activist. Lane describes a significant conflict in herself: between her duty to protest on behalf of others and her deeply ingrained cultural survival tactic of avoiding notice in order to avoid violence. Viscerally evocative on every page, Blood Loss is historically significant as a work of Asian American literature, women’s literature, and queer activist history.” - Alexander Chee, author of (How to Write an Autobiographical Novel: Essays) "At its best, the book is a poetic yet often devastating account of the worst of the AIDS epidemic, as well as the profound intimacy Lane experienced during this period." (Kirkus Reviews) "Blood Loss’s contents gush off of the page with aching urgency, begging readers to remember one more person-urging us to hold onto people history has already forgotten. . . . Blood Loss feels like the blanket that Lane used to warm her dying friends. Just as importantly, it also serves as a proud banner in the never-ending battle for equality, tolerance, and respect." - Jose Solís (The Body) "A deeply poetic and moving memoir of a queer political immersion at an early age." - Tim Murphy (Poz) "This is a book about brave and desperate acts of care, the necessity and impossibility of memory, and how time refuses closure. It differs from other AIDS activist memoirs not just in terms of perspective, but through its vulnerability, its openness to the porousness of experience, its drive to articulate the inexpressible." - Mattilda Bernstein Sycamore (TruthOut) "Through the lens of her relationships-with those who lived and those who have passed-Lane shows that love, loss, and survival are inherently intertwined, particularly within queer anticolonial movements, and the importance of community in times of crisis." - Allison Armijo (The Rumpus) "Blood Loss is an engaging and accessible book that offers a fresh perspective on the history of HIV/AIDS activism and attests to the power of friendship in surviving an epidemic." - Nicholas Derda (Synapsis) "There have been many books and memoirs written about the AIDS crisis, but few are as well-written and moving as Keiko Lane’s Blood Loss. . . . What Keiko Lane ultimately shows us, and with great skill, is that truth-the difficult, bloody, gritty truth-is beautiful, as Keats famously maintained, no matter what is being revealed. This is a memoir that deserves to be widely read." - H N Hirsch (Gay and Lesbian Review)